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i q i i PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE|_ gononat REVIEW Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as ‘Second Class ; Matter. GEORGED.MANN. - - - - - | Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express -'| the opinion of The Tribune, They Editor || 2" presented here ir order that our readers may have both sides || of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day, ' Foreign Representatives i G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY jl ch : CHICAGO - - - - - DETROIT | someritinG TO BE ASHAMED OF Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | Now that it’s all dver, isn’t there PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | something to be just a little asham- NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. ied of? = = a |The election of local candidates MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS j involved: chiefly matters of person- ———_—_—_—_- = _ al preference, and in~most cases the voter was guded by ‘his per- sonal knowledge of the candidate jand his preference on individual} jgrounds. The handling of the work, in the county offices, for in- ‘stances, {gs not of a character which |lends itself to the formulation of! = means eee t e s or to the creation of lines | - 7 " " j of Cleavage along partisan lines. | BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | The contests for state and na-| tional offices were of a difterent | character, In the election of state candidates the . voters were sup-} The ‘Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or! republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT SUBSCRIPTIO Daily by carrier, per year. . IN RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE, me Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)................ 7.20) posed to be declaring themselves Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) .... 5.00) ae eae Been eran | Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. ateraioy veyeetet 6.00 ines of policy in the handling of} the affairs of the state, and, in| jtheory, at least, the attitude of the | candidates on those issues gov-; erned. Because of peculiar condi- | tions surrounding this campaign } the contest for United States sen-| ator revolved around the same is-| sues. The personality of the candi- dates‘was secondary, THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) LET THE COMMISSION ACT The state railroad commission is charged with the super- yision of many million dollars of utility and railroad pro-| perty in the state. The commission, in its own reports,| a | asserts the legislature has not given it sufficient money to| |The attitude of the candidates on | function properly. | these governing issues was the | ane properly. : , {thing on which it was supposed that | While the law intended that the regulation of public! the ‘election should be decided. ' utilities should rest with the commission that body Those issues, and the position | has taken the position that it is a Semi-judicial | Wien Me eendiaates took, wa er body and because of this attitude, as well as a subjects of debate. It was, proper burden of work without sufficient funds, the com- that the voter should take a lively mission jhas seldom initiated a case. Unless con-/interest in these things, should sumers protest an extortionate rate may continue -to De ee ean en Suna aster | charged in any one of many cities and towns. The con-|).. position with all the force at| sumers must employ counsel and incur the emnity of the|nis commana. | utility to present their case. Unfortunately, other issues have / The commission requries that some utility compinies | eee eee ee aes au file reports of expenses and receipts.. It ought to be pos-j the subject matter really before the | sible, and it ought to be the duty of the commission if it is; voters. Because of the dragging in| to continue to function, to constantly check all utilities in|f these extraneous matters angry | the state, and regulate rates upon its own motion. Pee Ree ee seed yisibhs| A case in point is that of the Hughes Electric Company | tors and good friends have come to | of Bismarck. The railroad commission fixed rates for one|!00k upon each other with suspic. | year beginnign June 1, 1921. It fixed a valuation on the pro-/22,'nt Gisimust,, Tare ita pity? perty, from which the company did not appeal to the céurts.| wei it aie boodalaen now hatter It decided that the company should show an operating profit |some of those whom were learning | of $29,638.72 for one year in order to make an 8 per cent/to hate are pot, after all, the same, return on its investment. The reports of the company itself, |9'¢ friends that they were yester-| f f rt ;day, as warm-hearted, as kindly, on file with the railroad commission, show a profit of $66,-/as ‘generous as they were, a3| 571.63. Whether the company has included operating ex-|worthy as ever of the esteem in| penses which should not be included is a-matter for investi-| Which we held them, as incapable | gation, for which the city commission was asked to employ Be Oe of mus yevil: ‘which, an accountant, but has not done so. But the reports on their |to them. saeriet ete Haat cal face show that the company collected $36,932.91 more from tee ania the consumers of electricity and heat in Bismarck than the; A PERFECTLY SILLY RULE railroad commission decided it should collect in order to get ear ‘Lawrence told in The Her-.: a fair return on its investment. ald inst Aue enews Sem Or MECORS ae ‘ PA | ,» just ‘before leaving for Some consumers have petitioned the railroad commission | Europe, wrote a letter- to Senator for an investigation. But why should they have to do so?/Lodge proposing the abrogation of | Why should not the railroad commission have ordered an in-/the seniority rule in the senate. / vestigation when the company’s own reports to it showed) jt, letter seems to have been a} the utility was making.twice as much money as the railroad | something ought to Sone of rd : commission said it should make? The annual period in| The seniority rule is completely) question ended last May 30, over five months ago. Why|8Nd perfectly silly. The new situa- force consumers to go to the added expense of fighting a/ 0", whereby the Republican ma-) case wien the railroad commission has in its hands convine- \country to make B00 or got out, ing evidence? j brings its silliness out in vivid out- The railroad commisssion by law is required to fix rates 'lines. For in its will to make good, ; to yield a fair return to the utility. This commission has qe tepabticat party is going. to: held the maximum return to be allowed at 8 per cent on the’ fenders that Saver toah tanned re investment. If the commission is charged with the duty ofthe front not by ability hut by the giving the utilities a rate that will yield 8 per cent it ought operation of the seniority rule. | also to be charged with preventing the utilities from earn. | ,,,8 mor eeds new leader ing an unfair rate. If the railroad commission is to be merely ir Groot were necked ines growed, a-judicial body, then the legislature could well afford to estab-itodge’s leadership, which wagtal| lish a “department for consumers” and give it authority to | most fatal to himself, will.be fatal | initiate and prosecute cases in all parts of the state on be-/fT the party. There are in both| half of the consumers. But if the railroad commission ig |Monees ete hii oa naetears unable to function properly because it has not sufficient ought to be removed and aa atl funds it ought to be supported by the public in a demand |in who can get somewhere. upon the legislature that the funds be granted. | If the political upheaval that came about at the recent election effects the abrgoation of the absurd THE NEWBERRY CASE Seniority rule, it will be good for =Senator, Truman H. Newberry’s action in resigning his! Heri. anal te country —Dalnth seat in the United State Senate will do much to relieve the! Harding administration of a continued assault on the right of the senator to his seat, will remove the issue of.“‘New-! MUST MAKE GOOD In any case, all branches of the aroused and} BEGIN HERE TODAY M., -Jonquelle, greatest of French’ detectives, tells this story of a strange and famous Englishman and tells it without giving!’the man’s name. But the conqueron of the Soudan, who later met his death so tragically "in'- the’ Sea, was'known to all. 38) 9%). It was the love story of the man who lived and died in mystery. The great man.was was riding through Cairo, his thoughts on native trou- bles in Khartum. Suddenly he no- ticed a white woman; -accompanied by the resident doctor and her maid, enter a hotel. ’ He learned she was onée a great beauty in the United States who had been, unhappily married. She looked exhausted and in her face one read the tragedy of failure. "CHAPTER II Meanwhile, the doctor dfter a sword of diréction, left the woman‘at the second floor, and she entered her apartment with the maid. She took off her hat, went over to the window and sat down. She leaned on her el- bows, looking out, her face in her hands, her heavyNhair falling over her thin blue-veined fingers. The maid came with excited re- monstrance. Madame must go at once to bed. The doctor had or- dered it. Madame was taking a chance with her life. Her lungs would congest, She jwould. die mediately! In spite (of the dry at- mosphere ,there was_a certain damp- ness from the Nile at evening. But the woman gave no-attention. She sat quite motionless, looking down at the man on the gray Arab, at the edge of the Place. Esbekiya. She could sce only the white helmet, . ke ft Ps state 4 3 berryism” from ‘future elections, and should serve to im- unde;“control of the indercadece | he firm shoulders, the nervous press upon the country’ the unfortunate expenditure of large and with that control goes the obli- notes and eee ead ae street Be amounts of money in political campaigns. jgation and burden of “making| man’s face, but she knew the fei- 4 Senator Newberry was prosecuted under the Democratic 8°04. | gud dials ise no faushing tures of it. adminis 7 5 . a . he reverses suffered by 7 n a dis- ministration. after he was elected as a Republican over the republican. party throughoet| q2 2% come days, he had been a dis Henry Ford. The complaint made against the conduct of his ; the nation on election day illustrate campaign, as summarized by the majority of the investigat-jthe point. Unless conditions in ing senate committee, was in chief that his friends, being NO"th Dakota shall have become wealthy and realizing that an intensive campaign in a pri- yeproYd during the next two fs years, there will be some tough| mary election costs a great deal of money, spent it. The sledding for the independents in the! reviewers held that the expenditures of money, and not frau- next campaign. The péople do not| dylent use, was the basis of the complaints. His “crime”, "480" very closely nor very in- they held, was one of the indiscretion. | elligentiy in these matters: They | -.. If Senator Newberry were wrong in allowing his friends fh powee rape gandeand the ‘oarty to expend a large amount of money and if his offense were delivery or non-delivery of, the! nothing more, he is to be congratulated upon his courage te .s#™e. Who would have dreamed, resign for the good of the Harding administration and for iat the tide of republicanism | the good of the Republican party. His action commends the 1920 hae eaitand penne ra statements he made concerning his own election, and is not ebb in two shorL Veale: Yor eeal in-any way an admission of the truth of the charges hurled Herding: administration has per- against him, although his action will be wrongly construed ;'#?s, done as well as any other by many as an admission. jeould have done under the circum- Wxpenditures under th 3 : - : ‘ | stance No light task confronts pe e primary campaign system in the the Nestos administration in North last few years would have caused an uproar over the entire Dakota—La Moure Chronicle. country a scere of years ago, and yet only one man has been ' er singled out and all the calumny heaped upon him. Turn! to North Dakota. For the last six years all campaigns have nimrods that has 'a deer hanging in been much the same. The effect of the expenditure of time ‘tis back yard. and money : oer gi has been the same in each ‘ ae nesnborhoo’ of she Russell campaign and has had a cumulative effect. During that Pot#t0 patch ard a buck ran into period the Nonpartisan league and the indsoendent: cam- hae ae nea AGA Sain paign committees have expended far more money than Sen- e 18. i ged BRINGS DOWN BUNCH W. H. Richards is one of the very del us. Kichards used io ator Newberry’s most optimistic friends would have thought | live in Wisconsin and those fel'ars of spending. Mr. Frazier would never have been elected | US! ‘9 bé great huating.—Mercer Governor but for the expensive campaign carred on by Mr.|"Y petrol ae as Townley throughout the state, and he would not have been| There is no fundamental law upon elected senator but for the expenditures of thousands of dol-| Which the constitution of the Brit- lars in past campaigns. The same may be said of Independ-| is" <mpire rests, though there are ent candidates. The books cannot be balanced, for the entire’ its adininigtrs Honsbal?.vovernment. expenditure cannot be ascertained. self-support and self-defense. The Newberry case must forcibly impress upon the minds! 5 of the people the expense that is necessary in conducting! ,Clemence®™ says he loves all £ i ; American women.” He has never most campaigns under the primary system. Iheard those who can’t sing but do, He was loafing over | tinguished figure in the city. Under the visor of the helmet she could re- construct the face, with those domi- nating eyes of sword-blade, and th> features that in repose seemed mod- eled over iron. ‘And ‘there arose in her an ap ling sense‘of loss—a ghastly. sens of haying been trapped and cheated. Here was the destiny for which she was born into the world, and she had been turned another way inte the pit. Ah, God! If she had only had this bronze wall behind her, how far and how wonderfully she would have sone! Meanwhile the riot of sound and color poured along the Street Kamei Pasha, drifted across the Place Esbe- kiya, and entered the Rue Muski on the, way to the Tombs of the Caliphs. |Now, and then, one, exhausted, dropped out of the mad current and fell in the street, swathed in his | burnoose like a corpse. The whole square of the Place Esbekiya, was sown with these mo- tionless figures. Suddenly, far off in the border of the garden of the Esbekiya a gaunt figure grose from among these gast- ly groups, as in. a garden of the dead—a créature infinitely old, mat- ted with hair and naked under his burnoose. He extended his arm, ard ; his voice drifted with the vague wind northward as from the desert. It ‘came to the man sitting on the gray istance; a Arab as from a remote voice carried on_the wave er innumerable sounds; a long, desert cry, weird, eery, the words |slurred over and blurred. “O Sirdar! I will give it to you. . T will give it to y i crucify your soul! The voice trailed off in a thin, i | distinguishable whine, and the e. ANTI LA FoLLeTTe “Trim ON THE BEARD, MISTER? GET RIGHT IN, SIR! Triumphs M.Jonquelle: by MELVILLE DAVISSON © 19992 NEA Service,.inc, ( THE LAUGHTER OF ALLAH A \\\ v" XN \ XK \\ y) \v i ly wy ag oF 4 Post! ! ye ‘ciated creature sank down under his | burnoose. | 'The,man looked up and about him ‘like one who hears a whispering in ‘the sky. Then he turned his horse and. ode on slowly in the wake of the ptocession. He followed it east into:the Rue Muski. The horse picked its way along. careful to avoid the exhausted mail- meéri-who lay everywhere. The rider gave:the horse no attention. He rode with the reins slack in his fingers. As the . Rue Muski entered the} Neuve, the horse, to avoid a camel, stepped on the caftan of an exhaust- ted’ dervish, lying in a heap like a relaxed dead man, The hook barely touched the garment, but the drug. erazed creature beneath it suddenly | rolled over and buried his tecth ih} the horse’s leg above the fetlock. It was the quick, savage lunge of an infuriated dog. The horse bolted, and to keep him. from going head- | long into the crowd, the rider turned him into a side street. , But he could not master the mad- dened horse, The beast was wild; the iron bit clamped into its jaws as if cemented into a stone. As though infected by a virus, the horse was now asi crazed as the drug-drunken dervish. Nevertheless, the horse did not get away. | He fought down the narrow street | and out through the native quarter | of the, city, but the rider controlled him. and, but, for an accident, would have got him in hand. A water- skin “had broken in the street, and CHARACTERISTICS | Fortunately \\ ZZ 7) Kl 4 6 when the plunging horse struck the wet earth he fell. The thing all happened in a flash, and the man was thrown out of the saddle. As he arose a native servant, in livery, handed him ni helmet Which had rolled inte neighboring doorway. had stopped and a wo in the street beside him. “Oh, she cried, “are you hurt The voice had the soft liquid tones oi some southern country. He was not in the least hurt and he hastened to say it. The car was new and smart—tho sort’ of wonderful ‘thing one sees at eleven in the Rue de La.Paix. The woman was extremely young, a mere girl, he thought, for the lines of her slim figure were not yet rounded out. It was amagingly good in a suit of white* Chinese silk heavy duck and cut, in a half sporting style, wita a plaited coat, belt and patch an was out pockets, by a first-class London tailor. The girl was blushing slightly. Her eyes, colored like the velvet hull of an Italian chestnut, were wide under long lashes curling up. “It was a nasty cropper,” he said. “The horse went down -like a shot. the helmet got. the blow.” ‘And he pressed out the pieces of broken cork. “I thought you were killed,” sho said, Then shé turned foward the car.’ “Let me take you up.” He could not very well refuse and he got in. Besides, his horse was nowhere to be seen, and his ruined helmet would make him conspicuoug. in the street. It was. precisely sunset and from a thousand minarets the muezzin was calling out. The whole city. w: flaming pink, as though covered with the wings of innumerable flaming- oes. The horse had fallen as it en- tered a great square before a mosque. When they were seated they fell immediately into a pleasant talk, The charming thing about the girl was her perfect freedom., There was -not [ EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO | Lf HAP PISST Covec©eS Are THOSE OF CPPOSITS , AND We WEREN'T FOR YouR | JHIGH TEMPER ny toUuLD BE (© UT Nasty, \;@ narrow, iron gate in a high wall} wa letter to a hero, A motor-car/ TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1922 i* pretense in-her. She gave a bound- less :confience, She was wholly ab- | sorbed in the thing she talked about. ; Almost at once they were on a, | friendly footing, and the man found| |himself speaking of things which he {had never before discussed with any- | body—trifling, intimate things which | touch life here and there. * She loved a jar-fly and a trumpet: | | vine, she said. If she could only see | the trumpet-vine and hear the jar- jfly, she always became at once in-| | expressibly happy, no matter in what |mood. She tried to imitate th>| | Sound, putting cut her lips. | And he told her that a cock crow- ing in the afternoon strangely sad-| !dened him, like certain . desolate! {landscapes that impressed the be-| ‘holder with the end of all things. It] jmade him unutterably lonely. He | was not usually lonely, but that noty, | sounded in the sun, could chang+{ jhim like a wifch word. i | The motor-car which: had endes lered to enter a great boulevard jerowded with natives, made one or two turns and finally stopped before | Studded with spikes: The driver ex- plained that he could not reach th main entrance. The crowd ‘strangely obstinate and would not} make way for the ear. To go in with the girl seemed tal the man inevitable. She, offered, ,a| ;cup of tea and would send him on when the streets were opened. The ; crowds brought out by the sacred} ‘earpet would presently scatter. Besides, in the fascination of her | | delightful chatter, he was seeing just | ;then a slim little’ girl, mostly eyes, | ‘on the veranda of a big, old house in| ‘a southern state of America sur- ‘younded by magnolias through which | lyou caught the glimpse of white- | washed cabins, | She was lying down, with a forefgn | | illustrated paper before her, writing He could see every detail, so vivi was the narration. Shq kept put- ‘ting back a vagrant loek of hair that constantly fell down. Her lips were stained with red paint from the penholder where she had chewed it over a difficult word, and her |frock was daubed with ink where 'she had wiped her thumb. | | He knew the\worship of heroes at, that age for he had a Latin gram- mar in which was pasted a picture of Nelson, finger-printed with halos. 1 And he had a warm, bewildered feel- ling, as though the very day and | |hour of that fascinating time were; | restored. ' | The place they entered was en-j lelosed by the great wall set w ‘spikes, It was .native in its archi- tecture outside, with a flat roof, but jinside it was a white man’s house. jwith a drawing room on the second floor. They saw no servant as they went jin, although the house was lighted. | In the drawing-room no one an- swered the bell, and the girl went) out to discover the reason. The copcluding installment of this, unusual story will appear in our) 1 next. issue. i — >| | ADVENTURE OF || | THETWINS |, By Olive Barton Roberts The Green Wizard. had a letter | from Mr. Tingaling, the . fairy land- | lord, asking for’a pair of magical glasses, So he set about making them at once. He boiled two powders in sirup and set it out to cool, Then, |when it got hard, he cut out two jroand clear piéees with a biscuit cutter, and the rest was easy. “There you are, my dears,” he} said to the Twins, “You may take} these magieal glasses to Tingaling | and tell him that ater this he will | have no trouble at, all. { “He can see through a stone wall, | ‘or a mud bank,or a tree trunk with- | out trying and no one can fool him | any: more by pretending that he is | 'not at home. Be as quick as you can, for Buskins, the apple-tre: fairy, needs a pair of smoked glass- | es to keep the sun form hurting his | eyes when he travels up the sky. I want you to take them to him when | | you come back.” | “Can't we take them now, if they | ‘are ready,” said Nick quickly, “We! | have to go right past the old apple- | | tree where Buskins lives and we can leave them.” ‘ | ©That’s a f.ne idea!” replied the | Green Wizard. “Yes, they are all ready and done up in paper and tied | with a string. So you won't have to wait. Here they are.” ~Nancy took Tingaling's | which also were done up in paper and tied with a string, and put them |into her apron pocket. Then Nick | | took Buskins’ smoked glasses and | | put them into his, pocket, and the | two slid down the pine-tree amd hur- | | ried away on their errand. { | They hadn't noticed.a’ pair of | sharp eyes peering down at them. | | Light Fingers, the bad little fa | | was watching, | | i \ Hl i 1 | | glasses i | EXHAUSTED FROM GRIPPE CUUG it | La grippe coughs rack and tear ithe sufferer to a state of exhaus- | | tion. “Would get completely exhaust- | }ed from violent -grippe coughs,” ‘writes R. G. Collins, Barnegat, N. J. | “Tried Foley’s Honey and Tar andé | | the cough ceaged entirely.” Used by | | three generations for coughs, colds |and croup, throat, chest and bron- | chial irritation, Foley’s’ Hoaey and | | Tar has stood the test of time. Con- | tains no opiates—ingredients printed [on the wrapped. Largest selling | cough medicine in the world. | QUIT TOBACCO | So Easy to Drop Cigarette, | Cigar, or Chewing Habit \ \ \No-To-Bac has helped thousands tu break the costly, nerve-shattered te j vacco habit. Wheaever you have : | longing for a smoke or chew, just | | place a harmless No-To-Bac tablet in | | your mouth instead. All-desire stops | | Shortly the habit is completely bro- | | ken, and you are better off mentally, | physically, financially. It’s to easy. | so simple. Get a box of No-To-Bac | |and if it doesn’t release you from. } all craving for tobacco in any form, | | vour druggist will refund your | money without question, Adv. “ | | | | | | GIRL NOW WELL AND STRONG Daughter Took Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound as Mother Advised YS, Wauseon, Chie. eal daughter al- sways had backache and leg-ache at cer- pea tainperiodsandcould not be on her feet at those times. We read about Lydia E. Pink- Iham’s Vegetable Compound doing girls so much good so she began to take ‘it, That is two yearg ago and she is a dif: ° ferent girl since then lable to do any work she wants to do—al- though she is still careful not to do heavy work —and so well and strong.’ We recommendLydia E. Pinkham’ Sregetable Compound to all mothers with ailing daughters, andI give you permission to publish this let- ter asa testimonial. ”—Mrs. A.M. BURK-* HOLDER, Route No. 2, Box 1, Wauseon, * Ohio. 2 Something out of balance will affect the finest clock, causing it to gain or lose. The proper.adjustment made, all is well. Soit is with women. Some trouble may upset you completely. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound will correct tHe cause of the trou- dle and disagrecable symptoms. will disappear as they did in the case of Mrs, Burkholder’s daughter. ou Mortuers — it is worthy of your con- ‘dence. Bachelors are always at large. Three of our most beautiful words sre “Dinner is ready.” Gone are the days when a man ,, who didn’t need a shave was a dude. We can all be thankful this Thanksgiving that it is not against the law to eat cranberries. While listening to hunter’s tales remembers this: Very few witdeats weigh over 30 pounds. A marine officer who proposed to 2 girl by radio was accepted imme- diately. Radio is dangerous. In these days of robbers specding away/in autos jt is a ‘relief to learn an Ohio thief escaped on a cow. Just when people were feeling bet- iter toward Germany she begins ex- vorting musical instrument;. The bones of a poevrotherium have been found in Wyoming. Re member the name in case you meet one, y In Memphis, « sheriff wanted to‘ take Representitive Herrick's plage because he had an attachment for it. BE (eae The tariff affords relief for some industries, but what we need is re- lief from some industries. Looking up is an optimistic habit, ‘” but in Flint, Mich, a man asks $3,500 for hitting his nose*on an awning. } When the small boy voluntarily studies his lessons its a sure sign that Christmas is coming. Beauty secret: Not leaving when her father says leave may damage the seat of your trousers. The 32 world’s champion good 7 looking women will be chosen, but none of the winners will be sur- prised, . D’Annunzio is said to have written 2,500 miles of poctry, but feels a lit- tle better now. | Jess Willard is talking about com- ing back, but so far all Jess has done is talk back. » Most ‘of -us tave an idea that heaven is a place where there is enough good luck to go around. Many a fur coat has some unpaid billd in the pocket, The world’s greatest men their moments of foolishness Seorge’s son is named Gwyll have Lloyd n. Trouble with laying someihing aside fo> a damp day is you are al- ways coming to a little dew. All is fair in love and war and jwhen a man says, “Is it cold enough?” e—-. 4 —____________» | ATHOUGHT | o—. ———+ The secret of the Land is with them that fear him: and be will | show them his covenant.—Psalm 25:- ua The longer on this earth: we live And weigh the various qualities of men, more we feel the high, stera- featured beauty Of plain devotedness to duty; Steadfast and still, nor paid’ with mortal praise; But finding amplest recompense ¢ For life’s ungarlanded expense D Tm work done squarely and unwasted days. —James Russell Lewell. The Hill ity, Minn—Human bones found in the woods near Solana ate believed to be those of Arthur Rich- ardson, 66, farmer, who disappeared in August, 1919. Authorities believe he committed suicide. a { we ‘ a